Financial Development Database Overview
Financial Development Database Overview
Structure
June 1999
Abstract: This paper introduces a new database of indicators of financial development and
structure across countries and over time. This database is unique in that it unites a wide variety of
indicators that measure the size, activity and efficiency of financial intermediaries and markets.
It improves on previous efforts by presenting data on the public share of commercial banks, by
introducing indicators of the size and activity of nonbank financial institutions and by presenting
measures of the size of bond and primary equity markets. This paper describes the sources, the
construction and the intuition for the different indicators and presents descriptive statistics.
Beck: The World Bank; Demirgüç-Kunt: The World Bank; Levine: Carlson School of
Management, University of Minnesota. We are grateful to Joe Attia and Ian Webb for technical
assistance and to Gerard Caprio for comments. This paper’s findings, interpretations, and
conclusions are entirely those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the views of the
World Bank, its Executive Directors, or the countries they represent.
1
I. Introduction
A recent and expanding literature establishes the importance of financial development for
economic growth.1 Measures of the size of the banking sector and the size and liquidity of the
stock market are highly correlated with subsequent GDP per capita growth. Moreover, emerging
evidence suggests that both the level of banking sector development and stock market
development exert a causal impact on economic growth.2 Recent financial crises in South East
Asia and Latin America further underline the importance of a well-functioning financial sector
This paper introduces a new database that for the first time allows financial analysts and
financial sector. This database provides statistics on the size, activity and efficiency of various
financial intermediaries and markets across a broad spectrum of countries and through time. The
database will thus enable financial analysts and researchers to compare the level of financial
development and the structure of the financial sector of a specific country with that of other
countries in the region or countries with a similar GDP per capita level. It allows comparisons of
Previously, financial analysts and researchers have relied on a few indicators of the
banking sector and the stock market, using data from the IMF’s International Financial Statistics
and the IFC’s Emerging Market Database. This new database draws on a wider array of sources
1
For an overview over this literature see Levine (1997).
2
See King and Levine (1993a,b) and Levine and Zervos (1998) for correlation and Levine, Loayza and Beck (1999),
Beck, Levine and Loayza (1999), Neusser and Kugler (1998) and Rousseau and Wachtel (1998) for evidence on
causality. Also, Demirgüç-Kunt and Maksimovic (1998) show that firms in countries with an active stock market
and large banking sector grow faster than predicted by individual firm characteristics. Rajan and Zingales (1998)
show that industries that rely more heavily on external finance grow faster in countries with better-developed
financial systems.
2
and constructs indicators of the size, activity and efficiency of a much broader set of financial
institutions and markets. Specifically, this database uses bank-specific data to construct
indicators of the market structure and efficiency of commercial banks. Furthermore, this is the
first systematic compilation of data on the split of public vs. private ownership in the banking
sector. This database is the first attempt to define and construct indicators of the size and activity
of nonbank financial intermediaries, such as insurance companies, pension funds, and non-
deposit money banks. Finally, this database is the first to include indicators of the size of primary
equity markets and primary and secondary bond markets. This results in a unique set of
indicators that capture the development and structure of the financial sector across countries and
The remainder of the paper is organized as follows. Section II presents and discusses
indicators of the size and activity of financial intermediaries. Section III introduces indicators of
the efficiency and market structure of commercial banks. In section IV we define indicators of
the size and activity of other financial institutions. Stock and bond market indicators are
introduced in section V. Each section presents the indicators, the sources and the sample, and the
variance of the indicators across income groups of countries. Section VI offers concluding
remarks. Table 1 provides an overview of all indicators with cross-country and time-series
coverage. The appendix presents the sources and construction of the measures.
A first set of measures compares the size and activity of central banks, deposit money
banks and other financial institutions relative to each other and relative to GDP. We use data
3
from the IMF’s International Financial Statistics (IFS) to construct these indicators. The data
cover the period from 1960 to 1997 and 175 countries. This section (1) describes the three
different groups of financial intermediaries, (2) presents the different measures, (3) defines the
deflating procedure, and (4) presents some regularities of financial development over time and
across countries.
The indicators in this section distinguish between three groups of financial institutions:
central banks, deposit money banks and other financial institutions.3 The three groups are
defined as in the International Financial Statistics (IFS). The first group comprises the central
bank and other institutions that perform functions of the monetary authorities.4 The second
group, deposit money banks, comprises all financial institutions that have “liabilities in the form
of deposits transferable by check or otherwise usable in making payments” [IMF 1984, 29]. The
third group – other financial institutions - comprises other banklike institutions and nonbank
financial institutions. These are institutions that serve as financial intermediaries, while not
incurring liabilities usable as means of payment. Other banklike institutions comprise (i)
institutions that accept deposits, but do not provide transferable deposit facilities, (ii)
intermediaries that finance themselves mainly through issuance of negotiable bonds, (iii)
development banks, and (iv) offshore units. Nonbank financial institutions include insurance
companies, provident and pension funds, trust and custody accounts, real investment schemes,
3
For a detailed description of the three financial sectors see IMF (1984). The three groups correspond to lines 12,
22, and 42 of the IFS.
4
other pooled investment schemes, and compulsory savings schemes. Whereas data on other
banklike institutions are usually current and complete, only fragmentary data are available for
We distinguish between two different balance sheet items: total claims on domestic
nonfinancial sectors (lines a through d) and claims on the private sector (line d).5 In the following
we will denote the first with “assets” and the second with “private credit”. Whereas “assets”
refers to total domestic financial intermediation that the respective intermediary performs,
“private credit” captures the financial intermediation with the private nonfinancial sector. For
both measures, we exclude claims on central banks, deposit money banks and other financial
institutions (lines e through g) and therefore any cross-claims of one financial sector on another.
We present two groups of size indicators. The relative size indicators measure the
importance of the three financial sectors relative to each other, the absolute size indicators
The first three indicators are only presented if there are data available on all three
4
Exchange stabilization funds are the most typical case of monetary authority functions that are performed
separately from the central banks’ balance sheets. Furthermore, the central bank might perform commercial banking
tasks. Where possible, these are excluded from the central bank balance sheets when reported in the IFS.
5
- Deposit Money Banks Assets to Total Financial Assets
where Total Financial Assets are the sum of central bank, deposit money banks and other
Since these measures are calculated only if there are data available for all three
categories, we construct an alternative indicator that measures the relative importance of deposit
money banks relative to central banks, Deposit Money vs. Central Bank Assets. This measure
has been used as a measure of financial development by, among others, King and Levine
(1993a,b) and Levine, Loayza, and Beck (1998) and equals the ratio of deposit money banks
assets and the sum of deposit money and central bank assets.
The following three indicators measure the size of the three financial sectors relative to
GDP:
These measures give evidence of the importance of the financial services performed by the three
financial sectors relative to the size of the economy. The assets include claims on the whole
nonfinancial real sector, including government, public enterprises and the private sector.
Since many researchers have focused on the liability side of the balance sheet, we include
a measure of absolute size based on liabilities. Liquid Liabilities to GDP equals currency plus
5
In the case of other financial institutions we also include line 42h, claims on real estate in total claims on domestic
nonfinancial sectors and in private credit.
6
demand and interest-bearing liabilities of banks and other financial intermediaries divided by
GDP. This is the broadest available indicator of financial intermedation, since it includes all
three financial sectors. For the numerator we use either line 55l or, where not available, line 35l.
Whereas line 35l includes monetary authorities and deposit money banks, line 55l also includes
other banking institutions, as defined by the IMF. Line 35l is often also referred to as M2. Liquid
Liabilities is a typical measure of financial “depth” and thus of the overall size of the financial
sector, without distinguishing between the financial sectors or between the use of liabilities.
While the size measures do not distinguish whether the claims of financial intermediaries
are on the public or the private sector, the following two indicators concentrate on claims on the
private sector.
- Private Credit by Deposit Money Banks and Other Financial Institutions to GDP
Whereas the first equals claims on the private sector by deposit money banks divided by GDP,
the second includes claims by both deposit money banks and other financial institutions. Both
measures isolate credit issued to the private sector as opposed to credit issued to governments
and public enterprises. Furthermore, they concentrate on credit issued by intermediaries other
than the central bank. They are the measures of the activity of financial intermediaries in one of
its main function: channeling savings to investors. Both indicators have been used by
researchers, the first by Levine and Zervos (1998), and the second by Levine, Loayza and Beck
7
D. A Note on Deflating
We can distinguish between two groups of measures depending on the denominator. The
first group consists of ratios of two stock variables, whereas the measures in the second group
are ratios of a stock variable and a flow variable, specifically GDP. Whereas stock variables are
measured at the end of a period, flow variables are defined relative to a period. This presents
problems in the second group of indicators, both in terms of correct timing and in terms of
deflating correctly. To address these problems, we deflate the end-of-year financial balance sheet
items FD by end-of-year consumer price indices (CPI) and deflate the GDP series by the annual
CPI.6 Then, we compute the average of the real financial balance sheet item in year t and t-1 and
divide this average by real GDP measured in year t. The end-of year CPI is either the value for
December or, where not available, the value for the last quarter. The formula is the following.
FDt FDt −1
0.5 * ç + ÷
CPI e ,t CPI e ,t −1
(1)
GDPt
CPI a ,t
6
For the CPI numbers we use line 64 and for GDP line 99b from the IFS.
8
As exhibited by graphs 1 –3, our indicators of financial intermediary development show
considerable variation across countries and time.7 Graph 1 shows that central banks loose relative
importance as we move from low- to high-income countries, whereas other financial institutions
gain relative importance. Deposit money banks gain importance versus Central Banks with a
higher income level.8 As can be seen in graph 2, financial depth, as measured by Liquid
Liabilities to GDP, increases with the income level. Deposit money banks and other financial
institutions are bigger and more active in richer countries, whereas central banks are smaller.
Graph 3 shows that Liquid Liabilities to GDP and Private Credit by Deposit Money Banks to
GDP have increased constantly since the 60s. Central Bank Assets to GDP first increased from
the 60s to the 80s and then decreased again in the 90s. Deposit Money Banks vs. Central Bank
Assets first increased and then decreased over time, a result mainly driven by low-income
countries.
This section provides indicators of the efficiency and market structure of commercial
banks.9 The data were collected from individual banks’ balance sheets provided by IBCA’s
Bankscope database and from individual country sources such as central bank and supervisory
7
To assess the size and activity of financial intermediaries across countries, we use the World Bank classification of
countries according to their income levels (World Development Indicators 1998). We can distinguish between four
country groups; high income countries with a GNP per capita in 1997 higher than $9,656, upper middle income
countries with a GNP per capita between $3,126 and $9,655, lower middle income countries with a GNP per capita
between $786 and $3,125 and low income countries with a GNP per capita of less than $786.
8
We use medians for the four income groups to avoid the impact of outliers.
9
The classifications “commercial” and “deposit money banks” are close, but not exactly the same. Whereas IFS
defines deposit money banks consistently across countries, Bankscope uses country-specific definitions of
commercial banks.
9
body publications.10 We first present two efficiency measures of commercial banks. Then we
define several indicators of market structure, in terms of concentration, foreign bank penetration
and public vs. private ownership. Finally, sources and coverage are presented and some evidence
A. Measures of Efficiency
One of the main functions of financial intermediaries is to channel funds from savers to
investors. We construct two potential measures of the efficiency with which commercial banks
perform this function. The net interest margin equals the accounting value of a bank’s net
interest revenue as a share of its total assets.11 Overhead cost equals the accounting value of a
Unlike in the previous section, we do not deflate numerator and denominator of these two
measures, although they are ratios of a flow and a stock variable and therefore measured at
different points of time, for several reasons. First, unlike for macroeconomic variables, there is
no obvious deflator for individual banks’ assets and income flows. Second, unlike
macroeconomic variables and financial sector assets, bank-individual flows and stocks are
directly related. Third, financial assets and flows are not the product of quantity times price, as is
10
Unfortunately the coverage of Bankscope is less than 100% of most countries’ banking sector. This poses
relatively few problems in the case of the efficiency measures, but more so in the case of the measures of market
structure, as discussed below.
11
Ex-post spreads are preferable to ex-ante spreads, since the latter reflect the perceived loan risk, so that different
levels of risk faced by bankers distort these spread. Ex-post spreads also pose some problems though. So might
interest income and loan loss reserving associated with a particular loan incur in different periods. See Demirgüç-
Kunt and Huizinga (1998).
12
We also calculated numbers deflated by the CPI. The correlation between the deflated numbers and the nominal
numbers is 91% in the panel and 96% in the cross-section.
10
B. Measures of Market Structure
Here we collect and present data on the concentration of commercial banks, foreign bank
We use a concentration measure that is defined as the ratio of the three largest banks’
assets to total banking sector assets. A highly concentrated commercial banking sector might
result in lack of competitive pressure to attract savings and channel them efficiently to investors.
We present two measures of foreign bank penetration: the foreign bank share
(number), which equals the number of foreign banks in total banks, and the foreign bank share
(assets), which equals the share of foreign bank assets in total banking sector assets.13
Clasessens, Demirgüç-Kunt and Huizinga (1997) show that an increase in foreign bank
penetration leads to lower profitability and overhead expenses for banks. Demirgüç-Kunt,
Levine, and Min (1998) show that higher foreign-bank penetration enhances economic growth
by boosting domestic banking efficiency. A bank is defined as foreign if at least 50% of the
Public vs. private ownership has become an increasingly important issue for both
researchers and policy makers, not only in the banking sector, but also for the whole economy.14
This database includes the first compilation of panel data on the public ownership of commercial
banks. Public Share equals the share of publicly owned commercial bank assets in total
13
Both foreign bank indicator and the concentration measure might be biased upwards for developing countries, if
foreign and large banks are more likely to report than domestic and smaller banks. There is an additional caveat
concerning the two foreign penetration measures: since a bank is defined as foreign if it was foreign in 1998, take-
overs of domestic banks by foreign banks are not taken into account.
14
See Demirgüç-Kunt and Levine (1996).
11
commercial bank assets. A bank is defined as public if at least 50% of the equity is held by the
Data on the net interest margin, overhead costs, concentration and foreign bank
penetration use income statements and balance sheet data of commercial banks from the Bank
Scope Database provided by IBCA. Data are available for 137 countries and for the years since
[Link] ensure a reasonable coverage, only countries with at least three banks in a given year
are included. Although on average around 90% of the banking sector assets in a given country
and year are covered in IBCA, the possibility of sampling error and bias should not be
underestimated. Net interest margin and overhead costs are calculated as averages for a country
in a given year. Whereas for the two efficiency measures we use only unconsolidated balance
sheets, we use both unconsolidated and consolidated balance sheets for the concentration index
Data on public vs. private ownership are from Bankscope, Gardener and Molyneux
(1990) and individual country sources, such as central bank or supervisory body publications.16
Data are available for 41 developed and developing countries and for selected years in the 80s
and 90s. Numbers from Bankscope were double-checked with estimates from other sources.
D. The Efficiency and Market Structure of Commercial Banks across Income Groups
15
We use unconsolidated balance sheets for the efficiency measures to insure consistency. In the case of the
concentration index and the measures of foreign bank penetration we want to maximize the number of banks.
16
See the appendix for the listing of sources.
12
As can be seen in graph 4, commercial banks are more efficient in high and upper-middle
income countries. There is also a negative correlation between the income level and the
concentration of the commercial banking sector. There is a higher degree of foreign bank
penetration in low and lower-middle income countries both in terms of number and assets of
foreign banks. The most striking variance can be observed for public vs. private ownership of
commercial banks. Whereas public bank assets constitute over 70% of commercial bank assets in
low-income countries, their share is around 40% in middle income and 0% in high-income
countries.17
This section of the database presents the first systematic effort to collect data on financial
intermediaries other than central and deposit money banks. We first define five different groups
of other financial institutions before presenting indicators of their size and activity. Finally,
sources and coverage are presented and some evidence on the size and activity of other financial
In section II we included all financial intermediaries other than central and deposit money
banks in one group, called “other financial institutions”. In this section we try to get a better
17
Note that these numbers, like in all graphs are medians. The means for the income groups are 64% for low-income
groups, 38 and 39% for lower and upper middle income groups and 23% for high-income countries.
13
1. Banklike Institutions: This category comprises two groups of institutions; (i) intermediaries
that accept deposits without providing transferable deposit facilities, and (ii) intermediaries that
raise funds on the financial market mainly in form of negotiable bonds. Examples of the first
group are savings banks, cooperative banks, mortgage banks and building societies. Examples of
the second group include finance companies. These institutions often have specialized in very
between life insurance companies and other insurance companies. We do not include insurance
3. Private Pension and Provident Funds: Like life insurance companies, pension and provident
funds serve for risk pooling and wealth accumulation. We do not include pension funds that are
4. Pooled Investment Schemes: Financial institutions that invest on behalf of their shareholders
5. Development Banks are financial institutions that derive their funds mainly from the
government, other financial institutions and supranational organizations. On the asset side they
are often concentrated on specific groups of borrowers. Most of these institutions were set up
18
Note that this definition is more restricted than the IFS’ definition of other banklike institutions.
14
B. Measures of the Size and Activity of Other Financial Institutions
In this subsection we present size and activity indicators similar to the ones in section 2,
For all five other financial institution groups we construct measures of their size relative
to GDP by calculating the ratio of total assets to GDP. Unlike in section II, total assets refer to
balance sheet’s total assets.19 We also construct activity indicators by measuring the claims on
For the insurance sector we include an additional size and two additional activity
measures: We present assets and private credit of the life insurance sector where disaggregated
data are available. We also present life insurance penetration, measured by premiums/GDP and
life insurance density, measured by premiums/population. The first indicator provides evidence
on the importance of the life insurance sector relative to the total economy, the second evidence
C. Sources
Data on the size and activity of other financial institutions were collected mostly from the
IFS and individual country sources, such as central banks, bank and insurance supervisory bodies
and statistical yearbooks.21 These data are available for 65 countries and for the years since 1980.
19
Using balance sheet’s total assets is problematic since they might include cross-claims within a category of other
financial institutions and claims on other groups of financial intermediaries. A size measure like in section II that
includes only claims on the nonfinancial sector is therefore preferable, but not available for most countries.
20
Life insurance density is constructed as premiums in local currency divided by the purchasing power parity
conversion factor, obtained from the World Development Indicators, and the population. To obtain the real density,
we adjust these numbers by the annual CPI of the U.S.
21
A complete list of sources is available in the appendix.
15
Data on life insurance penetration and life insurance density come from SIGMA, a
monthly publication by Swiss-Re. Their data are “based on direct premium volume of
commercially active insurers, regardless of whether they are in state or private ownership.”
domestic or foreign insurers, is included. Data are available for 88 developing and developed
Graph 5 shows that the private credit by all 5 categories of other financial institutions
increases as we move from low- to high-income countries.23 Graph 6 shows that the private
credit by life insurance companies, the life insurance penetration and the life insurance density
increase with GDP per capita. Interestingly, for the first two measures, the lower-middle income
group exhibits the lowest medians. Also note, that the high-income countries exhibit a life
insurance penetration ten times as high as lower-middle income countries and a life insurance
This part of the database defines measures of the size, the activity and the efficiency of
primary and secondary stock and bond markets. By including bond markets and primary equity
22
We are grateful to Ian Webb for technical assistance in obtaining these data.
23
Using total assets instead of private credit yields a very similar picture. The graph might give a distorted picture,
especially in the case of development banks, since values of zeros are treated as “non-available”.
16
markets, this database improves significantly on previous work. Sources and coverage are
presented, as well as the variance of these indicators over time and across income groups.
As indicator of the size of the stock market we use the stock market capitalization to
GDP ratio which equals the value of listed shares divided by GDP. Both numerator and
denominator are deflated appropriately, with the numerator equaling the average of the end-of-
year value for year t and year t-1, both deflated by the respective end-of-year CPI, and the GDP
To measure the activity or liquidity of the stock markets we use stock market total
value traded to GDP, which is defined as total shares traded on the stock market exchange
divided by GDP. Since both numerator and denominator are flow variables measured over the
We use the stock market turnover ratio as efficiency indicator of stock markets. It is
defined as the ratio of the value of total shares traded and market capitalization. It measures the
activity or liquidity of a stock market relative to its size. A small but active stock market will
have a high turnover ratio whereas a large, while a less liquid stock market will have a low
turnover ratio. Since this indicator is the ratio of a stock and a flow variable, we apply a similar
17
As indicators of the size of the domestic bond market we use the private and public
bond market capitalization to GDP, which equals the total amount of outstanding domestic
debt securities issued by private or public domestic entities divided by GDP. Both numerator and
denominator are deflated appropriately, with the numerator equaling the average of the end-of-
year value for year t and year t-1, both deflated by the end-of-year CPI, and the GDP deflated by
As an indicator of the size of primary equity and debt markets, we use Equity Issues to
GDP (Long-term Private Debt Issues to GDP) which equals equity issues (long term private
debt issues) divided by GDP. Both numerator and denominator are in nominal terms, since both
D. Sources
Most of the secondary stock market data come from the IFC’s Emerging Market
Database. Additional data come from Goldman Sachs’ International Investment Research. Some
of the data are in local currency, some in US dollars. To deflate in a consistent way, we use the
local CPI and the U.S. CPI respectively.24 Data on the secondary bond market come from the
Bank for International Settlement (BIS) Quarterly Review on International Banking and
Financial Market Development and are in U.S. dollars. Data on the primary equity and debt
market come from country-specific sources and were collected by Aylward and Glen (1998) and
24
Using this method assumes a flexible exchange rate with respect to the U.S. dollar, so that inflation differentials
are reflected by changes in the exchange rates. Although this method is far from perfect, it is relatively accurate.
18
from the OECD Financial Statistics Monthly.25 They are partly in local currency, partly in U.S.
dollars. GDP numbers in local currency and the CPI numbers are from the International
Financial Statistics, GDP numbers in U.S. dollars are from the World Bank.
Secondary stock market data are available for 93 countries starting in 1975. Secondary
bond market data are available for 37 countries, mostly industrialized, and for the years since
1990. Primary market data are available for 42 countries, both industrialized and developing, for
There is a significant variation in size, activity and efficiency of stock markets across
income groups, as evident in graph 7. Countries with a higher level of GDP per capita have
bigger, more active and more efficient stock markets. Richer countries also have larger bond
markets and issue more equity and especially private bonds.26 Stock markets have increased in
size, activity and efficiency over the last three decades, as can be seen in graph 8.
This paper introduced a new and unique compilation of indicators of the size, activity and
efficiency of financial intermediaries and markets across countries and over time. It enables
financial analysts a comprehensive assessment of the development and structure of the financial
sector of countries compared to other countries and over time. It allows researchers to address a
25
We are grateful to Joe Attia for collecting the data from the OECD Financial Statistics Monthly.
26
We combine the low and lower-middle income groups for the bond measures, since India is the only low-income
country for which data are available.
19
The database is part of a broader research project that tries to understand the determinants
of financial structure and its importance for economic development. Specifically, the compiled
data permit the construction of financial structure indicators that measure the relative size,
activity and efficiency of banks compared to stock markets. These indicators can then be used to
investigate the empirical link between the legal, regulatory and policy environment and financial
structure indicators [Demirgüç-Kunt and Levine 1999] as well as the implications of financial
20
REFERENCES
Aylward, Anthony and Glen, Jack. “Emerging Primary Markets”, World Bank mimeo, February
1998.
Bank for International Settlement. Quarterly Review on International Banking and Financial
Market Development.
Beck, Thorsten, Levine, Ross and Loayza, Norman. “ Finance and the Sources of Growth”,
World Bank Policy Research Working Paper 2057, February 1999.
Claessens, Stijn, Demirgüç-Kunt, Asli and Huizinga, Harry. “How Does Foreign Entry Affect
the Domestic Banking Market?, World Bank mimeo, June 1997.
Demirgüç-Kunt, Asli and Huizinga, Harry. “ Determinants of Commercial Bank Interest Margins
and Profitability”, World Bank Policy Research Working Paper 1900, March 1998.
Demirgüç-Kunt, Asli and Levine,Ross. “The Financial System and Public Enterprise Reform:
Concepts and Cases”, in: Hermes, Niels and Lensink, Robert (eds.): Financial
Development and Economic Growth, 1996.
Demirgüç-Kunt, Asli, Levine,Ross, and Min, Hong G. “ Opening to Foreign banks: Issues of
Stability, Efficiency, and Growth”, World Bank mimeo, July 1998.
Demirgüç-Kunt, Asli and Maksimovic, Vojislav. "Law, Finance and Firm Growth," Journal of
Finance, 1998, 53, pp.2107-2137.
Gardener, Edward P.M. and Molyneux, Philip. “ Changes in Western European Banking”,
London: Unwin Hyman, 1990.
Goldman Sachs. “International Investment Research. Anatomy of the World’s Equity Markets”,
September 1986.
King, Robert G. and Levine, Ross. "Finance and Growth: Schumpeter Might Be Right,"
Quarterly Journal of Economics, August 1993a, 108(3), pp. 717-38.
King, Robert G. and Levine, Ross. "Finance, Entrepreneurship, and Growth: Theory and
Evidence," Journal of Monetary Economics, December 1993b, 32(3), pp. 513-42.
Levine, Ross. “Financial Development and Economic Growth: Views and Agenda,” Journal of
21
Economic Literature, June 1997, 35(2), pp. 688-726.
Levine, Ross, Loayza, Norman, and Beck, Thorsten. “Financial Intermediation and Growth:
Causality and Causes”, World Bank Policy Research Working Paper 2059, February
1999.
Levine, Ross and Zervos, Sara. “Stock Markets, Banks, and Economic Growth,” American
Economic Review, June 1998, 88, pp. 537-558.
Neusser, Klaus and Kugler, Maurice. "Manufacturing Growth and Financial Development:
Evidence from OECD Countries," Review of Economics and Statistics, November 1998,
80, 636-46.
Rajan, Raghuram G. and Zingales, Luigi. "Financial Dependence and Growth," American
Economic Review, June 1998, 88, pp. 559-86.
Rousseau, Peter L. and Wachtel, Paul. “Financial Intermediation and Economic Performance:
Historical Evidence from Five Industrial Countries,” Journal of Money, Credit, and
Banking, 1998, 30, pp.657-678.
22
Table 1: Coverage of the Variables
Time span Number of countries Number of observations
23
Graph 1: Financial Intermediary Development Across Income Groups
100.00%
90.00%
80.00%
70.00%
60.00%
Low
Lower middle
50.00%
Upper middle
High
40.00%
30.00%
20.00%
10.00%
0.00%
Central Bank Assets to Deposit Money Bank Assets Other Financial Institutions Deposit Money vs. Central
Total Financial Assets to Total Financial Assets Assets to Total Financial Bank Assets
Assets
24
Graph 2: Financial Intermediary Development Across Income Groups
70.00%
60.00%
50.00%
40.00% Low
Lower middle
Upper middle
30.00% High
20.00%
10.00%
0.00%
Liquid Liabilities to Central Bank Deposit Money Other Financial Private Credit by Private Credit by
GDP Assets to GDP Bank Assets to Institutions Assets Deposit Money Deposit Money
GDP to GDP Banks to GDP Banks and Other
Financial
Institutions to GDP
25
Graph 3: Financial Intermediary Development Over Time
90.00%
80.00%
70.00%
60.00%
50.00% 60s
70s
80s
40.00% 90s
30.00%
20.00%
10.00%
0.00%
Liquid Liabilities to GDP Central Bank Assets to GDP Private Credi by Deposit Deposit Money Bank vs.
Money Banks to GDP Central Bank Assets
26
Graph 4: Efficiency and Market Structure of Commercial Banks Across Income Groups
100.00%
90.00%
80.00%
70.00%
60.00%
Low
Lower middle
50.00%
Upper middle
High
40.00%
30.00%
20.00%
10.00%
0.00%
27
Net Interest Overhead Cost Concentration Foreign Bank Foreign Bank Public share
Margin Share (Assets) Share (Number)
Graph 5: Private Credit by Other Financial Institutions Across Income Groups
25.00%
20.00%
15.00%
Low
Lower middle
Upper middle
High
10.00%
5.00%
0.00%
Private Credit by Private Credit by Private Credit by Private Credit by Private Credit by
Other Banklike Insurance Companies Private Pension and Pooled Investment Development Banks to
28
Institutions to GDP to GDP Provident Funds to Schemes to GDP GDP
GDP
Graph 6: Life Insurance Development Across Income Groups
10.00
9.00
8.00
7.00
6.00
Low
Lower middle
5.00
Upper middle
High
4.00
3.00
2.00
1.00
0.00
Private Credit by Life Insurance Life insurance pentration (premium Life insurance density (premium
29
Companies to GDP volume to GDP) volume in constant USD per capita), in
100s of USD
Graph 7: Stock and Bond Market Development Across Income Groups
40.00%
35.00%
30.00%
25.00%
Low
Lower middle
20.00%
Upper middle
High
15.00%
10.00%
5.00%
0.00%
Stock market Stockmarket Stock market Private bond Public bond Equity issues Long-term
capitalization to total value turnover to market market to GDP Private Debt
GDP traded to GDP GDP capitalization to capitalization to Issues to GDP
GDP GDP
30
Graph 8: Stock Market Development Over Time
50.00%
45.00%
40.00%
35.00%
30.00%
70s
25.00% 80s
90s
20.00%
15.00%
10.00%
5.00%
0.00%
Stock Market capitalzation to GDP Stock Market Total Value Traded to GDP Stock Market Turnover
31
Appendix: Sources
Section II
All raw data are from the electronic version of the IMF's International Financial Statistics
[Link]---CLAIMS ON GOVERNMENT(NET)--
12A..ZF---MONAUTH:CLAIMS ON CENTRAL GOVT (LOC CURR)--
[Link]---MONAUTH:CLAIMS ON OFF ENTITIES (LOC CURR)--
12B..ZF---MONAUTH:CLAIMS ON STATE & LOC GOVTS (LOC CURR)--
[Link]---CLAIMS ON NONFINANCIAL ENTERP.--
12C..ZF---MONAUTH:CLAIMS ON NONFIN PUB ENTERPRISES (LOC CURR)--
12D..ZF---MONAUTH:CLAIMS ON PRIV SECTOR (LOC CURR)--
The following lines are included in Deposit Money Bank Assets, if available
The following lines are included in Other Financial Insitutions Assets, if available
The following lines are included in Private Credit by Deposit Money Banks, if available
The following lines are included in Private Credit by Deposit Money Banks and Other Financial Institutions, if available
2
[Link]---CLAIMS ON PRIVATE SECTOR--
[Link]---CLAIMS ON PRIVATE SECTOR--
[Link]---CLAIMS ON PRIVATE SECTOR--
[Link]---CLAIMS ON PRIVATE SECTOR--
[Link]---CLAIMS ON PRIVATE SECTOR--
[Link]---CLAIMS ON PRIVATE SECTOR--
[Link]---CLAIMS ON PRIVATE SECTOR--
[Link]---CLAIMS ON PRIVATE SECTOR--
42D..ZF---OTHFININST:CLAIMS ON PRIV SECTOR (LOC CURR)--
For the annual deflator the Consumer Price index, line 64…ZF, is used
For the end-of-period deflator the December value of the Consumer Price index, line 64M..ZF, or,
if not available, the 4th quarter value of line 64Q..ZF is used
3
Section III
Data on all variables, except Public Share are from IBCA's Bankscope database. The data for Public Share were collected
from the following sources. If the public banks are not clearly marked in the publication, the classification is also added.
Argentina
Austria
Bangladesh
Belgium
Bolivia
Brazil
Canada
Source: Bankscope
Time span: 1997
Colombia
Costa Rica
Source: Bankscope
Time span: 1992-97
Denmark
4
Ecuador
Source: Bankscope
Time span: 1997
Egypt
Source: Bankscope
Time span: 1990-97
Finland
Source: Statistical Yearbook of Finland (share of Postpankki assets in total commercial bank assets)
Time span: 1980-88
France
Germany
Ghana
Greece
Guatemala
India
Indonesia
Source: Bank Indonesia, Indonesia Financial Statistics (commercial banks other than private exchange
and foreign & joint exchange banks)
Time span: 1986-97
Ireland
5
Italy
Japan
Source: Bankscope
Time span: 1997
Mexico
Source: Bankscope
Time span: 1993-94
Netherlands
New Zealand
Source: Bankscope
Time span: 1997
Norway
Pakistan
Source: Bankscope
Time span: 1990-96
Philippines
Portugal
Spain
Sri Lanka
Source: Bankscope
Time span: 1992-96
6
Sweden
Switzerland
Source: Banque Nationale Suisse, Les Banques Suisses en 19.. (share of cantonal bank assets in total
commercial bank assets)
Time span: 1980-97
Thailand
Tunisia
Turkey
United Kingdom
United States
Source: Bankscope
Time span: 1997
Uruguay
Source: Bankscope
Time span: 1990-96
Zambia
7
Section IV
The following information lists the sources, the time span and the definition of the categories for each country.
All numbers are total assets or total financial assets, unless otherwise stated.
The raw numbers are for December, unless otherwise noted. If the raw numbers are for other months, the deflating process
is adjusted correspondingly.
An asterisk denotes series for which datapoints had to be extrapolated.
The sources for life penetration and density are listed at the end.
Data on GDP in local currency and CPI are from the electronic version of the IFS, as described in the appendix for section II.
Argentina
Australia
Assets:
Banklike Institutions Permanent building societies
Credit cooperatives
Money market corporations
Pastoral financial companies
Finance companies
General financiers
Intra-group financiers
Other financial corporations
Co-operative housing societies
Securisation vehicles
Pooled Investment Schemes Other managed funds (cash management trusts, common funds)
Public unit trusts
8
Development Banks Other banks (Australian Resource Development Bank, Commonwealth Development Bank
and, prior to reclassification in 1988 to trading banks, the Primary Industry Bank of Australia.)
Private credit:
Lines included: total loans excluding loans to related companies, unless otherwise noted
Insurance Companies Life insurance offices (debentures & notes, shares, other investments and loans)
Private Pension Funds Superannuation funds (bills of exchange, debentures & notes, domestic shares and loans)
Pooled Investment Schemes Cash management trusts (bills of exchange and other promissory notes)
Public unit trusts (bills of exchange, debentures & notes, domestic shares & loans)
Development Banks Other banks (Australian Resource Development Bank, Commonwealth Development Bank
And, prior to reclassification in 1988 to trading banks, the Primary Industry Bank of Australia.)
Austria
Assets
Banklike Institutions Building societies
Private credit
Lines included: other domestic bonds, other domestic obligations, shares, other domestic loans
Bahamas
9
Assets (Source a):
Banklike Institutions Other local financial institutions
PO Savings Bank
Private credit:
Banklike Institutions (Source b) Licensed banks and trust companies other than commercial banks (corresponds to
other local financial institutions)
Barbados
Sources: (a) through 1995: Central Bank of Barbados, Annual Statistical Digest, and
after 1995: Central Bank of Barbados, Economic and Financial Statistics
(b) IFS
Time span: 1980-97
Belgium
Assets:
Banklike Institutions Savings banks (Source a)
Caisse generale d'epargne et de retraite, (Source a)
Mortgage companies and capital redemption companies (Source c) *
Belize
10
Assets (Source a):
Development Banks Development Finance Corporation
Bolivia
Brazil
Assets:
Banklike Institutions Investment
banks
Housing credit companies
S&L
associations
Leasing companies
Private credit:
Line included: total credit to private nonfinancial sector
11
Canada
Insurance Companies Life insurance business and segregated funds of life insurance companies
Property and casualty insurance companies and accident and sickness branches of
life insurance companies
Private credit:
The following lines are included in data collected form Source a: trade receivables, consumer credit, other loans, mortgages,
other bonds and shares
Banklike Institutions (Source b) Quebec Savings Bank, since 87 classified as deposit money bank
Credit unions and caisses populaires
Sales finance and consumer loan companies
Trust companies and mortgage loan companies
Insurance Companies(Source a) Life insurance business and segregated funds of life insurance companies
Property and casualty insurance companies and accident and sickness branches of
life insurance companies
Poled Investment Schemes Mutual funds (Source a )
Chile
Assets:
Banklike Institutions Financial companies (Source a)
12
Mutual funds (Source b)
Private credit:
Lines included in data collected from Source b are: stocks, mortgage backed securities, corporate bonds
Colombia
Assets
Banklike Institutions Savings and housing corporations
Private finance companies
Trade finance companies
Financial coporations
Banco Central Hipotecario
Caja Social de Ahorros
Private credit:
Line included is: credito al sector privado
Denmark
Assets:
Banklike Institutions Mortgage credit associations and local governments' credit associations (Source a)
Financing companies (Source b)
Denmarks Skibskreditfond (Source a) *
Manufacturing & Manual Industries' Finance Corporation (Source a) *
The Mortgage Bank of the Kingdom of Denmark (Source a) *
The Fisheries Bank of the Kingdom of Denmark (Source a) *
13
Insurance Companies(Source a) Life insurance companies *
Non-life insurance companies *
Dominican Republic
Assets:
Banklike Institutions Private non-financial intermediaries (devt. banks, mortgage banks and S&L associations)
Private credit:
Line included: Credito interno al sector privado
Banklike Institutions Private non-financial intermediaries (devt. banks, mortgage banks and S&L associations)
Ecuador
14
Egypt
Assets:
Development Banks Specialized banks (Source a)
Private credit
Development Banks Specialized banks (Source c)
Insurance Companies Insurance companies (Source b, included lines: securities and loans, other than of/to govt.)
El Salvador
Assets
Banklike Institutions Finance companies (Source a), earlier called S&L associations
General warehouses (Source b)
Fiji
Finland
Assets:
Banklike Institutions Mortgage banks (Source b) *
15
Finance companies (Source b) *
Others (development and investment companies, banking houses, holding companies
and pawnshops)
(Source b) *
France
Assets:
Banklike Institutions Finance companies and securitiy houses
Private credit:
Line included: Creance sur l'economie
Germany
Assets:
Banklike Institutions Building societies (Source a)
16
Greece
Assets:
Pooled Investment Schemes Mutual funds (Source b)
Development Banks Specialized credit institutions, include: Agricultural Bank, National Mortgage Bank,
Investment Bank, National Investment Bank for Industrial Development, Hellenic
Indsutrial Development Bank, National Housing Bank, Deposits and Loan Fund
and Postal Savings Banks. (Source a)
Guatemala
Assets:
Banklike Institutions Private finance companies
General warehouses
Trust accounts
Guyana
Assets:
Banklike Institutions New Building Society
Trust companies
Guyana Co-operative Mortgage Finance Bank
Private credit:
Line included: private sector
17
Honduras
Assets:
Banklike Institutions (Source b) Specialized finance companies
India
Assets:
Insurance Companies Life Insurance Corporation of India (Source b)
Indonesia
Assets:
Banklike Institutions State and private savings banks (since 89 included in deposit money banks)
Financial companies
18
Private credit:
line included: claims on private enterprises and individuals
Ireland
Pooled Investment Schemes Collective investment schemes, authorized by the CB - total net asset values
Israel
Assets:
Banklike Institutions (Source a) Industrial investment finance banks
Mortgage banks
Private credit:
Lines included are: loans, shares, nontradeable bonds, private bonds, credit to the public
Italy
Assets:
Banklike Institutions Specialized credit institutions (Source a)
Pooled Investment Schemes Investment funds and securities investment funds (Source b)
19
Jamaica
Assets:
Banklike Institutions Finance houses and trust companies
(Source a) Merchant banks
Building societies
Credit unions
Trust companies
Japan
Sources: (a) Research and Statistics Department, Bank of Japan, Economic Statistics Annual
(b) Research and Statistics Department, Bank of Japan, Economic Statistics Monthly
Time span: 1980-97
For most categories total assets, for some categories sum of principal assets
Assets:
Banklike Institutions Zenshinren banks
(Source a) Credit cooperatives
Shinkumi Federation Bank / Natl. Federation of Credit Cooperatives
Labor credit associations
Natl. Federation of Labor Credit Associations
Agricultural cooperatives
Credit Federation of Agricultural Cooperatives
Fishery cooperatives
Credit Federation of Fishery Cooperatives
Postal Savings Bank- total deposits
Foreign banks
Securities finance companies
Securities investment trusts
Trust accounts of deposit money banks (includes city, regional and trust banks)
Postal Life Insurance and Postal Annuity
Development Banks Government financial institutions: Japan Devt. Bank, Export-Import Bank,
(Source b) Hokkaido and Tohoku Devt. Corp., People's Finance Corp., Housing Loan Corp., Agr.,
Forestry & Fisheries Finance Corp., Small Buiness Corp., Japan Finance Corp. for
Municipal Enterprises, Small Business Credit Insurance Corp., Environmental Sanitation
Business Finance Corp., Okinawa Devt. Finance and Medical Care Facilities Finance Corp.
Trust Fund Bureau
20
Private credit:
Lines included are: loans, corporate bonds, stocks
Jordan
Assets
Banklike Institutions Other financial corporations, including: finance companies,
(Source a) investment companies, securities companies. However, institutions included
may change from time to time.
Development Banks Specialized credit institutions, including Cities and Village Development Bank,
Industrial Development Banks, Housing and Development Corporation,
Agricultural Credit Corporations and Jordan Co-operative Organization
Private credit:
Banklike Institutions Other financial corporations (loans and corporate bonds/shares)
(Source a)
Development Banks Specialized credit institutions (included institutions vary over time)
(Source c)
Kenya
21
Assets:
Banklike Institutions Kenya Post Office Savings Bank (data since 84 from source b, before 84 from source a)
Nonbank financial institutions (Source b)
Korea
Private credit
Lines included in data collected from source a: loans, stocks, debentures
Malawi
Assets:
Banklike institutions New Building Society
[Link] Bank
Natl. Finance Company
Leasing and Finance Company
22
Development Banks Investment and Development Bank
Private credit:
Lines included: Private sector
Malaysia
Assets:
Banklike Institutions National Savings Bank (Source b) *
Co-operative societies (Source b) *
Merchant banks (Source a)
Discount houses (Source b) *
Finance companies (Source a)
Building societies, Pilgrims Management and Fund Board, Cagamas Berhard,
Credit Guarantee Corporation, leasing, factoring and venture capital companies
(Source b) *
Development Banks Development institutions (Malaysia Industrial Development Finance, Agricultural Bank,
Borneo Development Corporation, Sabah Credit Corporation, Development Bank of
Malaysia, Industrial Bank of Malaysia, Sabah Development Bank). (Source b) *
Private credit
Lines included are: Loans and corporate bonds/stocks
Development Banks Development institutions (Malaysia Industrial Development Finance, Agricultural Bank,
Borneo Development Corporation, Sabah Credit Corporation, Development Bank
of Malaysia, Industrial Bank of Malaysia, Sabah Development Bank). (Source b) *
23
Malta
Source: IFS
Time span: 1980-97
Private credit
Banklike institutions Banks that grant long-term loans and do not offer deposits
Mexico
Private credit:
Banklike Institutions Factoring companies (cartera de factoraje con recursos y deudores diversos)
(Source a) Leasing companies (cartera vigente)
Warehouse companies (otras inversiones, creditos, deudores diversos)
Morocco
Source: IFS
Time span: 1980-96
Private credit:
Development Banks National Development Bank, National Agriculture Bank, Credit Immobilier et Hotelier
Caisse de Depots et de Gestion, Caisse des Marches
Netherlands
Sources: (a) Nederlandse Bank, Annual Bulletin There are varying definitions of the different groups and in different source
(b) OECD, Methodological Supplement The Statistical Yearbook presents signifcantly different numbers
Time span: 1980-96
Assets:
Banklike Institutions Mortgage banks and building societies (Source b) *
Private sector financial institutions: lombard banks/finance companies, special institutions
for financing export and industry, bill-brokers, municipal credit banks) (Source b) *
Savings banks til 82 (classification according to OECD) (Source b) *
24
Private Pension Funds Private pension funds (Source a)
New Zealand
Nigeria
Assets:
Banklike Institutions Community banks, privately owned micro-finance institutions
Discount houses
Primary mortgage institutions
Finance companies
Private credit:
Included lines are: loans and private securities
25
Norway
Private credit:
Lines included in data collected from source b are: other bonds, other certificates,
loans to the public/nonfinancial enterprises and municipalities, shares, definitions vary over time and across categories
Pakistan
Assets:
Insurance Companies (Source b) State Life Insurance Corporation
Non-life insurance companies
Paraguay
26
Source: Banco Central de Paraguay, Boletin Estadistico
Assets:
Banklike Institutions S&L associations for housing
Finance companies
Peru
Source: IFS
Time span: 1980-97
Private credit
Development Banks Five development banks
Philippines
Assets:
Banklike Institutions Thriftbanks (Savings banks, private development banks, stock S&L associations)
Rural non-deposit banks
Financing companies
Venture capital corporations
Pawnshops
Lending
investors
Nonstock savings and loan associations
Mutual building and loan associations
Development Banks Specialized government banks (Development Bank of the Philippines, Land Bank
of the Philippines, Philippine Amanah Bank)
Portugal
Assets:
Banklike Institutions Agricultural credit cooperatives
Central agricultural credit cooperative
Finance and credit companies
Other intermediaries
27
Private Pension funds Private pension funds
Rwanda
Source: IFS
Time span: 1980-96
Private credit:
Development Banks Development Bank
Saudi Arabia
Source: IFS
Time span: 1980-96
Private credit:
Development Banks Saudi Agricultural Bank, Saudi Industrial Development Fund, Public Investment Fund,
Real Estate Development Fund, Saudi Credit Bank
Singapore
Assets:
Banklike Institutions Finance companies (Source a)
Merchant banks (Source a)
Total amount lent by pawnbrokers (Source a)
Private credit:
Banklike Institutions Finance companies (Source d)
Development Bank Development Bank of Singapore (Source c, lines included: loans, investments,
equity and corporate bonds)
Solomon Islands
Assets
Banklike institutions Other local financial institutions
28
South Africa
Assets:
Banklike Institutions Participation mortgage bond schemes, excluding hire-purchase finance companies,
factoring and other similar finance companies, not registered as financial institutions -
total funds received and invested
Finance companies
Private credit:
Lines included are: loans other than to public sector and other securities
Spain
Assets:
Banklike Institutions (Source a) Specialized credit institutions (money market intermediary companies, mortgage
loan companies, financial leasing companies, finance and factoring companies
and other specialised credit institutions
Private credit:
Banklike Institutions (Source c) Specialized credit institutions (money market intermediary companies, mortgage
….loan companies, financial leasing companies, finance and factoring companies
and other specialised credit institutions
Insurance Companies Insurance companies (short-term securities, bonds, shares and loans,
(Source b) all of these to non-financial enterprises and households)
29
Sri Lanka
Assets:
Banklike Institutions National Savings Bank (Source b) *
Development Banks Development Finance Corporation, total loans and equities outstanding (Source d)
State Mortgage and Investment Bank, total loans outstanding (Source a)
National Development Bank (Source c)
Private credit:
Included line is: total loans
Sweden
Switzerland
Assets:
Banklike Institutions (Source a) Private banks (trust accounts, security companies)
Mortgage banks
30
Clearing banks (three banks, one owned by agricultural cooperatives, one by
regional banks, the third is an intl. clearing bank)
Taiwan
Assets:
Banklike Institutions Credit cooperative associations
Credit departments of farmers' and fishermen's associations
Postal Savings System
Bills finance companies
Fuh-Hua securities finance companies
Investment and trust companies
Private credit:
Lines included are: loans, securities private sector, corporate bonds and commercial papers
Thailand
31
Export-Import Bank
Tonga
Source: IFS
Time span: 1980-97
Private credit:
Development Banks Tonga Development Bank
Sources: (a) Central Bank of Trinidad and Tobago, Quarterly Statistical Digest
(b) IFS
Time span: 1980-96
Tunisia
Assets:
Banklike Institutions Leasing companies
Off-shore banks
Private credit:
Line included: Creance/credit a l'economie
Turkey
32
Assets (Source a):
Banklike Institutions Special finance houses
United Kingdom
Banklike Institutions Finance houses and other specialized credit-granting institutions (data after 89 from Source b)
Investment trusts
USA
33
Assets:
Banklike Institutions Issuers of asset-backed securities
Finance companies
Mortgage companies
Funding corporations (funding subsidiaries, nonbank financial holding companies, and
custodial accounts for reinvested collateral of securities lending operations)
Bank personal trusts and estates
Private Pension Funds Private pension funds (includes Federal Employees' Retirement System Thrift Savings Plan)
Development Banks Government-sponsored enterprises ( Federal Home Loan Banks, National Mortgage Ass.,
Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corp., Farm Credit System, the Financing Corp.,
the Resolution Funding Corp., and the Student Loan Marketing Ass.), federally related
mortgage pools (GNMA, FNMA, FHLMC) and Farmers Home Administration pools
Private credit:
Lines included are: corporate and foreign bonds, corporate equities, other loan and advances, consumer credit and mortgages
Private Pension Funds Private pension funds (includes Federal Employees' Retirement System Thrift Savings Plan)
Development Banks Government-sponsored enterprises ( Federal Home Loan Banks, National Mortgage Ass.,
Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corp., Farm Credit System, the Financing Corp.,
the Resolution Funding Corp., and the Student Loan Marketing Ass.), federally related
mortgage pools (GNMA, FNMA, FHLMC) and Farmers Home Administration pools
Uruguay
Private credit
Line included: credito al sector privado
34
Venezuela
Assets:
Banklike Institutions (Source a) Mortgage banks
Venezuela Workers Bank
National S&L System
Finance companies
Investment banks
Leasing companies
Zimbabwe
Sources: (a) Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe, Quarterly Economic and Statistical Review
(b) Central Statistical Office, Monthly Digest of Statistics
(c) Annual Report of Zimbabwe Development Bank.
(d) Report of the Registrar of Insurance
(e) Reports of the Registrar of Pension and Provident Funds
(f) IFS
Time span: 1980-96
The raw numbers for building societies and the Zimbabwe Development Bank are for June
Assets:
Banklike Institutions Building societies
(Source a) PO Savings Bank.
Finance houses.
35
Private credit:
Except for data from source f, included lines are: loans, debentures and stocks/shares
Data on life insurance premium volume are from various issues of Sigma
Data on total population and the purchasing power parity conversion factor (local currency unit per international $)
are from the electronic version of theWorld Development Indicators.
Data on GDP in local currency are from the electronic version of the IFS, either line 99B..ZF or, if not available, line [Link].
The deflators in in US dollars are from the IFS, as described in the appendix for section II.
36
Section V
Data on market capitalization and total value traded are mostly from the IFC’s Emerging Market Database,
with additional data from Goldman Sachs (1986)
Data on GDP in US dollars are from the electronic version of theWorld Development Indicators.
Data on GDP in local currency are from the electronic version of the IFS, either line 99B..ZF or, if not available, line [Link].
The deflators in local currency and in US dollars are from the IFS, as described in the appendix for section II.
Data on private and public market capitalization are from the Bank for International Settlement Quarterly Review on
International Banking and Financial Market Development. They were downloaded from the BIS’ webpage and are
from a Table 15: Domestic Debt Securities, by sector and country of issuer.
Data on GDP in US dollars are from the electronic version of the World Development Indicators
The deflators in US dollars are from the IFS, as described in the appendix for section II.
Data for the following countries were obtained from Aylward and Glen (1998).
They were obtained from national sources. Contributing organizations are:
37
Germany OECD Financial Statistics Monthly
Japan OECD Financial Statistics Monthly
United States OECD Financial Statistics Monthly
Great Britain OECD Financial Statistics Monthly
The following country data were taken from OECD Financial Statistics Monthly.
Listed will be the country and line numbers for equity and debt issues
Data on GDP in local currency are from the electronic version of the IFS, either line 99B..ZF or, if not available, line [Link].
The deflators in local currency and in US dollars are from the IFS, as described in the appendix for section II.
38